There are 7 main functions in the package.
The exact2x2
function calculates the exact conditional tests with matching confidence intervals as detailed in Fay (2010a <DOI:10.1093/biostatistics/kxp050>,2010b). The functions ss2x2
and power2x2
calculate the sample size and power related to the tests of exact2x2
. The uncondExact2x2
and boschloo
functions calculate unconditional exact tests.
The binomMeld.test
function calculates melded confidence intervals for two sample binomial inferences (see Fay, Proschan, and Brittain, 2015 <DOI:10.1111/biom.12231>).
Finally, the borrTest
function calculates the boundary optimized rejection region test that
creates unconditional exact tests that have power optimized when group 1 is expected to have 100 percent failure. For example, in vaccine challenge studies where the control group are all expected to get infected (see Gabriel, et al, 2018 <DOI:10.1002/sim.7579>, the letter about that paper by Martin Andres <DOI:10.1002/sim.7630>, and the response <DOI:10.1002/sim.7684>).
Package: | bpcp |
Type: | Package |
Version: | 1.6.4.1 |
Date: | 2020-06-29 |
License: | GPL3 |
LazyLoad: | yes |
Fay, M. P. (2010a). Confidence intervals that Match Fisher's exact and Blaker's exact tests. Biostatistics, 11: 373-374 (go to doc directory for earlier version or https://www.niaid.nih.gov/about/brb-staff-fay for link to official version).
Fay, M.P. (2010b). Two-sided Exact Tests and Matching Confidence Intervals for Discrete Data. R Journal 2(1):53-58.
Fay, MP, Proschan, MA, and Brittain, E (2015). Combining One Sample Confidence Procedures for Inference in the Two Sample Case. Biometrics. 71: 146-156.
Gabriel, EE, Nason, M, Fay, MP, and Follmann, DA. (2018). A boundary-optimized rejection region test for the two-sample binomial problem. Statistics in Medicine. 37(7): 1047-1058 (DOI: 10.1002/sim.7579).
Gabriel, EE, Nason, M, Fay, MP, and Follmann, DA. (2018). Reply to letter from Martin Andres. Statistics in Medicine 37(14): 2303-2306.
Martin Andres, Antonio. (2018). Letter to the editor about Gabriel et al. Statistics in Medicine 37(14) 2301-2302.